The Lights on the Hill by Gareth St Omer
St lucian fiction
Source – Personal copy
I have longed to read more fiction from the Caribbean, as the books I have read over the years have always been unusual, and for me it is one of the few areas of the world where I hear very little discussion about fiction. I saw this in a charity shop, not knowing there was also a series of Caribbean writers from Heinemann, like their African writers series. I see on Goodreads that there were 35 books in this series. I have a couple in other editions, but if you have read any of them, I’d love to know which and how you found them, please. Gareth St Omer was part of a group of writers that emerged in the 60s from St Lucia, with Derek Walcott being the best known of them. Gareth Stomer taught in the us most of his career, and a lot of his novels have been republished by Peepal Tree Press (They are doing a great job bringing writers like this back in print )
“What are you thinking of?” Thea asked him.
“Nothing,” he answered.
“I knew it. One would think I should have learnt by now. Yet every time I ask the same question.”
“And every time I give the same answer?”
“Yes, every time. How many times have I asked that question in two years I wonder?”
He did not answer.
“Do you think you could tell me?”
“How should I know?”
“Of course. You wouldn’t. You don’t even hear me sometimes.”
“Now. You mustn’t exaggerate.”
“You must keep your secrets very well.”
“I have no secrets.”
His back was on the ground and his hands were under his head. The stars moved quickly, in formation, against the sky. He looked again and the illusion was gone. It was the clouds that moved briskly under the stars fixed above them. Below the clouds, in the distance, far away, clusters of dancing lights clung to the mountain top.
Tonight, because of the moon, they were less bright.
“Of course you have secrets. Everyone has secrets.”
The opening lines and yes Stephenson has a few secrets
The lights on the hill was originally part of a longer novel by Gareth St Omer, buit was brought out as a Standalone novella. The book follows a man named Stephenson, in his thirties, who is slowly struggling to reach the light on the hill of his life. He has had many failures in his life, both at work and in his personal life, and this book seems to show him experiencing an existential crisis. But the book also shows how the colonial past of the country he lives in shapes it, and how the church exerts its influence on a small island that is maybe known as very inward-looking and can trap a man like Stephenson.he is trying as he is now an adult student at university and has a girldfriend but will he escape his past of family he didn’t know and make a sucsess of himself. As we foolow a man trying to make good but caught up in his past and present holding back his future
“Those youngsters,” he used to say to Stephenson speaking of the four young men, fresh from school, who had come with Stephenson to teach on the island.
Stephenson, too, had found their antics trying most of the time. He would have been very much alone if Ronald had not befriended him. Ronald took him to his home. That first year Laura had not yet gone back to their own island. While Ronald and Stephenson drank Gordon’s Gin with orange, Laura sat and sewed or knitted, talking only infrequently. Mantovani was playing the Classics on a record. Laura was part white and part South American Indian. She was very beautiful and her speech was not always grammatically correct.
And it was through Ronald that he had met Rosa.
we learn more about what has happen to him over time
When this book came out, it was called one of the most daring and accomplished works of fiction by a writer who ranks among the best of the 20th century. This is what i love about my reading life is discoveries like this lost writers that were fifty years ago considered cutting edge and some how like I say Caribbean fiction seems out of fashion maybe but not sure why we are always seing existentalist fiction from the like of Kafka, Statre Etc on reels and instagram pictures because lets face it its easy to pick up what every one else like but for me this ranks up with those books as a piece of existenalist fiction but also it is a piece of post colnional fiction that world he is trapped in is because of the colonial past. Have you heard of or read St Omer, or any other writer from St lucia?















